Publication Date

1-1-2024

Journal

Oncoimmunology

DOI

10.1080/2162402X.2024.2384667

PMID

39108501

PMCID

PMC11302547

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

8-5-2024

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-Print

Published Open-Access

yes

Keywords

Humans, Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse, DNA Mismatch Repair, Tumor Microenvironment, Male, Female, Mutation, Middle Aged, Aged, Biomarkers, Tumor, Prognosis, Adult, Mismatch Repair Endonuclease PMS2, DNA-Binding Proteins, DNA mismatch repair, dMMR, PD-1, DLBCL, immune, MSH6, tumor microenvironment, multiplex IHC, mutation, gene expression profiling, MYC, p53, heterogeneity, genomic instability, HDAC

Abstract

Deficient (d) DNA mismatch repair (MMR) is a biomarker predictive of better response to PD-1 blockade immunotherapy in solid tumors. dMMR can be caused by mutations in MMR genes or by protein inactivation, which can be detected by sequencing and immunohistochemistry, respectively. To investigate the role of dMMR in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), MMR gene mutations and expression of MSH6, MSH2, MLH1, and PMS2 proteins were evaluated by targeted next-generation sequencing and immunohistochemistry in a large cohort of DLBCL patients treated with standard chemoimmunotherapy, and correlated with the tumor immune microenvironment characteristics quantified by fluorescent multiplex immunohistochemistry and gene-expression profiling. The results showed that genetic dMMR was infrequent in DLBCL and was significantly associated with increased cancer gene mutations and favorable immune microenvironment, but not prognostic impact. Phenotypic dMMR was also infrequent, and MMR proteins were commonly expressed in DLBCL. However, intratumor heterogeneity existed, and increased DLBCL cells with phenotypic dMMR correlated with significantly increased T cells and PD-1+ T cells, higher average nearest neighbor distance between T cells and PAX5+ cells, upregulated immune gene signatures, LE4 and LE7 ecotypes and their underlying Ecotyper-defined cell states, suggesting the possibility that increased T cells targeted only tumor cell subsets with dMMR. Only in patients with MYC¯ DLBCL, high MSH6/PMS2 expression showed significant adverse prognostic effects. This study shows the immunologic and prognostic effects of genetic/phenotypic dMMR in DLBCL, and raises a question on whether DLBCL-infiltrating PD-1+ T cells target only tumor subclones, relevant for the efficacy of PD-1 blockade immunotherapy in DLBCL.

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